Count Love

On Jan. 18, 2018, we mailed off a card to each senator and congressional
representative with the following message:
“Last year, local news outlets reported over 571 protests in California about
civil rights, racial injustice, immigration, healthcare, and the environment where
your constituents advocated for a more compassionate country.” Of course, we didn’t
send the California card to everyone—we artisanally crafted fifty different cards
and tailored the protest counts for each state. They look like this on the outside...

...and like this on the inside:

The cards were fun to make. We printed, stuffed, and stamped each one by hand...

...and there were a lot of names to get through: five hundred thirty five,
in total. (While preparing these cards, it struck us as a bit odd that in
some states with just one congressional representative, that representative represents
more people but has less voting power than the senators in the same state.)

We don’t know if any senators or representatives will actually see our card;
we hope that at least a few will. We came up with the idea
of making informational cards for everyone while visiting
with our family in December. We were brainstorming how we could
use all the protest data that we’ve amassed to try and make a difference.
As engineers and scientists and programmers, our tendency is to
think about the endless number of technically fascinating problems that we could solve
to make crawling news articles and categorizing protests easier (in fact, we
do love solving these types of problems and we’ve worked on many of them in the past year).
But, to help advocate for a more compassionate country, we need to do more than collect data.
We have to reach out and communicate
continuously, and this is our first attempt to tell our country’s elected officials
what their constituents asked for over the last year.